Tesla Will Make Its Cars Fully Self-Driving, but Not Turn the System On Yet

A Tesla model on display last week outside the Fontainebleau Castle in France before the start of the e-Rallye Monte Carlo, a competition between electric cars.Credit
Bertrand Guay/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

DETROIT — Tesla Motors said on Wednesday that it would equip all of its new vehicles with technology that enables fully autonomous driving, but would not activate the system until it undergoes further testing.

In a blog post, the maker of electric cars said the new hardware included cameras, sensors and radars that allow the vehicles to operate without a human driver.

The company said the technology would be installed in all of its models, including the much-anticipated Model 3 sedan, which is expected to reach the United States market next year.

“We are excited to announce that, as of today, all Tesla vehicles produced in our factory — including Model 3 — will have the hardware needed for full self-driving capability,” the company said.

Tesla’s chief executive, Elon Musk, had been hinting in recent weeks that the company was eager to improve upon its existing Autopilot feature, which assists drivers rather than controls the vehicle entirely.

The vehicle, operating in Autopilot mode, collided with a white tractor-trailer, which the system failed to recognize because of bright sunlight.

Tesla recently announced improvements to the Autopilot feature that Mr. Musk has said would have prevented the Florida accident.

But the company now appears to be moving beyond systems that assist human drivers, to newer technology that enables fully autonomous driving.

“It looks like Tesla’s Autopilot features are that much closer to actually being a true Autopilot and not just a name for a suite of autonomous features,” said Akshay Anand, an analyst with automotive research firm Kelley Blue Book.

The Tesla blog post said that although the hardware would be installed in all new vehicles, the fully autonomous driving system would not be enabled until more testing was performed.

“Before activating the features enabled by the new hardware, we will further calibrate the system using millions of miles of real-world driving,” the company said, without announcing a specific timetable.

Tesla is undergoing a significant expansion with the addition of the Model 3, which will be priced at $35,000 — less than half the cost of its higher-end sedans and Model X sport utility vehicle.

The company is ratcheting up production of the Model 3 at its California plant, and expects to begin filling more than 300,000 pre-orders sometime next year.

Correction: October 21, 2016

A picture caption in some editions on Thursday with an article about Tesla’s decision to install, but not yet activate, fully autonomous driving technology in its new vehicles misidentified the location of the Fontainebleau castle, in front of which a Tesla was shown. It is in France, not Monaco.